A Jesuit is a Catholic priest or brother who belongs to the Society of Jesus. I have never heard of a Jesuit Catholic.
A Jesuit priest is a Catholic priest. A Jesuit is someone who is a member of the Society of Jesus, which is a religious order in the Catholic Church.
There is no such thing as a "Jesuit war" that I know of in Catholic history.
Jesuit College is an all boys Catholic school.
A French Jesuit is a Catholic priest who belongs to the Society of Jesus and is from France.
The hallmark of Jesuit philosophy was always for the greater glory of God, Jesuit philosophy is the same as Catholic philosophy, the Jesuits were typically more educated then the run of the mill Catholic priest.
A Jesuit is ais a member of a male religious order of the Roman Catholic Church.
.Catholic AnswersThe Jesuit Order was one of the major spearheads in enacting the reforms of the Council of Trent in the Catholic Church.
The Jesuit Order or the Society of Jesus is a Catholic Religious Order. Most Jesuits are ordained Catholic Priests, it is just a specific subset of priests.
If he is a member of the order of priests known as the Society of Jesus (the Jesuit order).
A Jesuit priest is a Catholic priest. A Jesuit is someone who is a member of the Society of Jesus, which is a religious order in the Catholic Church.
No. It is not a "form" of Catholicism per se, rather, it is a religious order within the Catholic Church.
where some schools are Jesuit like Georgetown and Boston College, providence college is a catholic school similar to University of Notre Dame. The difference is that Jesuit schools are ones that were founded with catholic roots by the catholic church. A catholic university was both founded by the catholic church, but also ran by the catholic church still to this day. Usually with a catholic seminary involved. Providence is a very catholic college. Their mascot is the friar, and still to this day friars and nuns teach at the college.